Moving Pictures Mfsl

Rush - Moving Pictures (1981) {MFSL UDCD 569} * REPOST *  Music

Posted by Goodspeed at May 19, 2014
Rush - Moving Pictures (1981) {MFSL UDCD 569} * REPOST *

Rush - Moving Pictures (1981) {MFSL UDCD 569}
EAC+LOG+CUE | FLAC (image) | 1 CD | Size: 245 MB | Artwork @ 600dpi: 85 MB | TT 40:14 min. | 5% recovery | FP/UL
Genre: Prog Rock | Label: Mercury Records | MFSL Release date: Nov. 1992 | Catalog nr. 15775 15692

This version of the album is just outstanding in almost every way. It is bold without being overly loud, it has a warm almost vinyl sound to it, and the detail is just amazing.
The Kinks - Low Budget (1979) [MFSL 2003] PS3 ISO + DSD64 + Hi-Res FLAC

The Kinks - Low Budget (1979) [MFSL 2003]
PS3 Rip | SACD ISO | DSD64 2.0 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 59:18 minutes | Scans included | 1,88 GB
or DSD64 2.0 (from SACD-ISO to Tracks.dsf) > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | Full Scans included | 1,71 GB
or FLAC (carefully converted & encoded to tracks) 24bit/88,2 kHz | Full Scans included | 1,26 GB
Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab # UDSACD 2008

Low Budget is the eighteenth studio album by English rock group the Kinks, released in 1979. Following the minor success of their 1978 album Misfits, the band recorded the majority of the album in New York rather than London. Unlike the more nostalgic themes of many Kinks albums prior to Low Budget, many of the album's songs allude to current events of the time. Musically, the album is a continuation of the band's "arena rock" phase, resulting in a more rock-based sound and more modern production techniques.

Rush - Signals (1982) [MFSL, UDCD 614]  Music

Posted by v3122 at March 22, 2021
Rush - Signals (1982) [MFSL, UDCD 614]

Rush - Signals (1982)
EAC | Flac(Image) + Cue + Log & MP3 CBR 320Kbps
1994 | MFSL, UDCD 614 | ~ 277 or 103 Mb | Scans(jpg) -> 24 Mb
Progressive Rock

Instead of playing it safe and writing Moving Pictures, Pt. II, Rush replaced their heavy rock of yesteryear with even more modern sounds for 1982's Signals. Synthesizers were now an integral part of the band's sound, and replaced electric guitars as the driving force for almost all the tracks…
V.A. - Top 100 80's Rock Albums By Ultimate Classic Rock: CD01-CD25 (1980-1989)

V.A. - Top 100 80's Rock Albums By Ultimate Classic Rock: CD01-CD25 (1980-1989)
FLAC (*tracks+.cue+log,scans)(*image+.cue+log,scans) | Run Time: 1d 3:49:35 | 11.9 Gb
Genre: Classic rock, psychedelic rock, blues rock, pop-rock, arena rock, prog rock
Label: Atlantic, Columbia, Capitol Records, Mercury…

The Top 100 '80s Rock Albums span a series of genres as startling and varied as the era's neon-flecked fashions.No one was immune to the early-decade emergence of new wave, from up-and-coming acts to legacy groups – many of whom began incorporating the then-new sound into their bedrock approach.Meanwhile, classic rock and subsequently metal began a transformation into mass acceptance when the edges were smoothed out to form arena rock and hair metal, respectively. The arrival of roots, thrash, and world music influences kept things interesting, along the way. All of it made selecting the period's best releases both intriguing and deeply challenging.Check out the list below, as Ultimate Classic Rock takes a chronological look at the Top 100 '80s Rock Albums.

Ravel : Bolero MFSL  Music

Posted by avoros at July 4, 2006
Ravel : Bolero MFSL


MFSL Aluminium


By 1983 MoFi had grown into a company with over 25 employees and grossing over $8 million annually. Then they nearly lost it all. The new darling on the scene was the compact disc. Because MoFi had been putting something on the order of 20% of their earnings back into research, they were prepared for the next wave. In the mid ‘80s, they launched their assault on the CD market with their half-speed
wares.

Their first efforts were released on aluminum discs, very much like all other discs at the time. And, in fact, some of these have become quite rare. Recently copies of them regularily go for >$75 on e-Bay. Partly, in an effort to justify the higher price they needed to charge, MoFi began to release their works on gold-plated compact discs called UltraDiscs. Although gold in and of itself isn’t significantly better than aluminum for the reproduction of ones and zeros, it oxidizes roughly ten times more slowly than aluminum. It is also supposed to coat more evenly than aluminum. This last attribute is said to cut down on the pin-holing so common to aluminum CDs, which allows for less error-correction during playback. This means more of the actual recording and less processor interpolation gets to your ears. So there was some inherent advantage to the gold treatment.